logo
Japan's Kanagawa Pref. police mistakenly arrest Thai woman for not carrying passport

Japan's Kanagawa Pref. police mistakenly arrest Thai woman for not carrying passport

The Mainichi30-04-2025
YOKOHAMA -- Police in eastern Japan's Kanagawa Prefecture mistakenly arrested a Thai woman for not carrying her passport, failing to notice it inside a sanitary napkin in her possession, it has been learned.
According to investigative sources, Isezaki Police Station officers arrested the woman around the evening of April 28 for allegedly violating the Immigration Control and Refugee Recognition Act by not carrying her passport. During an initial body check at the scene, police failed to find the passport inside the sanitary napkin. It was only discovered during a subsequent search after her arrest.
The police station temporarily released the woman, but arrested her again under the same law on suspicion of residing in the country illegally after a check with immigration authorities reinforced suspicions that she had overstayed her visa.
A prefectural police representative commented, "We conducted a thorough investigation, including a body check. At this point, we believe the investigation was appropriate."
(Japanese original by Chika Yokomi, Yokohama Bureau)
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Japanese pop idol Kenshin Kamimura convicted of indecent assault but avoids jail in Hong Kong
Japanese pop idol Kenshin Kamimura convicted of indecent assault but avoids jail in Hong Kong

The Mainichi

time4 hours ago

  • The Mainichi

Japanese pop idol Kenshin Kamimura convicted of indecent assault but avoids jail in Hong Kong

HONG KONG (AP) -- Japanese pop idol Kenshin Kamimura was found guilty of a charge of indecent assault on a female interpreter in a Hong Kong court Wednesday before some emotional fans. Kamimura, a former member of a Japanese boy group named ONE N' ONLY, was arrested in the southern Chinese city in March. In the same month, his contract was terminated due to a serious compliance violation. In April, he pleaded not guilty. He allegedly touched the interpreter's thigh repeatedly during a celebratory dinner at a restaurant. During the trial last month, the interpreter testified through a live video link that Kamimura had invited her to a bathroom elsewhere. After she dismissed the request and told him she had a boyfriend, Kamimura continued to touch her thigh, she said. The defense argued the interpreter exaggerated her claims and the alleged bathroom invitation might not have been based on improper motives. Judge Peter Yu handed down the conviction Wednesday, saying Kamimura touched the intrepreter in a caressing nature that implicitly carried a sexual undertone and had indecent intent. After the verdict was announced, a few of Kamimura's fans wept in the courtroom. But Kamimura looked relieved when the judge issued a fine of 15,000 Hong Kong dollars (about $1,900) and no prison term. The maximum penalty for the charge is 10 years of imprisonment. The singer's supporters, including some from Japan and mainland China, formed long lines inside the court building to secure a seat in the main courtroom before the hearing. Others from mainland China who attended said they were not fans but wanted to learn more about the case, especially after seeing criticism of the female interpreter online. University student Betty Zhong from the Chinese city of Shenzhen said she was not a Kamimura fan but had attending the court hearings in Hong Kong because a friend likes the J-pop idol and she wanted to know what happened. She said she was surprised Kamimura was charged during a visit to Hong Kong. "News reports are not so comprehensive. When I come here, I can understand it holistically and the explainations from both sides," she said. Kamimura also is an actor who appeared in several TV dramas including the boys' love series "Our Youth" and the popular drama "Ossan's Love Returns."

Thailand Claims Another Soldier Injured by Landmine Along Cambodian Border
Thailand Claims Another Soldier Injured by Landmine Along Cambodian Border

The Diplomat

time4 hours ago

  • The Diplomat

Thailand Claims Another Soldier Injured by Landmine Along Cambodian Border

Accusing Cambodia of laying fresh mines, the Thai military said that 'we may be compelled to exercise our right to self-defense under international law.' TwoSoviet-made PMN-2 antipersonnel landmines, similar to the mines that the Royal Thai Army claims to have unearthed along its border with Cambodia. Another Thai soldier was injured by a landmine near the Cambodian border yesterday, Thailand's army said, the second such incident to have taken place since the two nations agreed to a ceasefire. In a statement, Royal Thai Army (RTA) spokesperson Maj. Gen. Winthai Suvaree said that the explosion happened at around 9:10 a.m. on a regular patrol route around 1 kilometer from Ta Moan Thom temple in Surin province. The soldier who stepped on the mine suffered severe wounds to his ankle and is currently being treated at the hospital. He accused Cambodia once again of laying fresh landmines and of committing 'a direct attack on Thai forces in Thai territory,' the Bangkok Post reported. 'This incident is evident proof that Cambodia violates the ceasefire agreement and international humanitarian laws, especially the Ottawa Treaty which bans the use and installation of all kinds of anti-personnel landmines,' Winthai said. The claim comes after the RTA claimed that three Thai soldiers were injured by a landmine on August 9, while on a similar patrol on the border between Thailand's Sisaket province and Cambodia's Preah Vihear province. One soldier lost a foot and the other two were injured in the explosion, it said. Thailand says that it has uncovered Russian-made PMN-2 anti-personnel mines in the vicinity of several of the recent explosions, which are not used by the RTA and show signs of being freshly laid. These incidents follow a meeting of the bilateral General Border Committee on August 7, when the two sides agreed to a 13-point plan to maintain the ceasefire that brought the fighting to an end on July 28. Among these were mutual pledges to freeze border troop movements and patrols, not to reinforce their positions along the border, and 'not to undertake provocative actions that may escalate tensions.' The explosions now threaten to rekindle last month's five-day conflict, which killed at least 43 people and displaced more than 300,000 on both sides of the border. Similar landmine explosions on July 16 and July 23 prompted Bangkok to recall its ambassador from Phnom Penh, and precipitated the initial outbreak of hostilities between the two nations on July 24. In response to Cambodia's alleged laying of fresh mines, Winthai said that the Thai army might be forced again to take more forceful steps to defend its soldiers. 'If pressure continues to mount, we may be compelled to exercise our right to self-defense under international law, in order to address the losses suffered by Thai military personnel as a result of Cambodia's violations of the ceasefire agreement and Thailand's sovereignty,' he said. As with the past accusations, Cambodia's government yesterday dismissed Thailand's accusation that it had laid new mines. 'Cambodia maintains its firm stance that it has not and will not use or plant any new landmine,' Defense Ministry spokesperson Maly Socheata said in a regular press briefing. She also repeated the fact that many border areas are still seeded with explosives from Cambodia's decades of civil war, claiming that this was the source of the explosion. Meanwhile, Cambodia continues to accuse Thailand of its own violations of the ceasefire. In a letter dated August 11, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs formally notified the United Nations Security Council of a string of alleged Thai violations. It claims that since the end of hostilities on July 28, Thai military units 'have repeatedly crossed into Cambodian territory, illegally laid barbed wire, and built roads at multiple points along the border,' in the Khmer Times' paraphrase. Regarding the landmine issue, there are two separate questions in dispute: First, whether Cambodia has laid fresh landmines along the border; and second, whether it has done so since the ceasefire. On at least the first count, Thailand should be able to make a convincing case to the outside world. The RTA says that it recovered three PMN-2 mines from the area adjacent to yesterday's explosion, which it said were in 'new condition' and not remnants from past conflicts. PMN-2 mines, which were manufactured in the Soviet Union from the 1970s until the 1990s, were among the most 'commonly found' mines laid during the country's civil war, Phnom Penh said in its submission to the United Nations in 2000, after it joined the Ottawa Convention. Since then, Cambodia claims that it has destroyed all of its stockpiles of anti-personnel mines in line with the treaty. However, Article 3 of the Ottawa Convention permits nations to retain a small number of mines 'for the development of and training in mine detection, mine clearance, or mine destruction techniques.'As of 2020, Cambodia 'reported having 3,730 anti-personnel mines and other types retained for these permitted purposes,' according to the Convention's website. Cambodia's own most recent Article 7 submission clarifies that this includes the PMN-2 model. Thailand claims that it destroyed all of its stockpiles under the Ottawa Convention in 2003. It also reported that it destroyed the small number of antipersonnel mines that it held for research and training purposes in 2019.

Record 1 ton of cannabis, worth $35 mil., seized in Japan
Record 1 ton of cannabis, worth $35 mil., seized in Japan

The Mainichi

time4 hours ago

  • The Mainichi

Record 1 ton of cannabis, worth $35 mil., seized in Japan

TOKYO (Kyodo) -- Japanese narcotics agents said Wednesday they have seized 1.046 tons of cannabis worth about 5.2 billion yen ($35 million) on the street, marking Japan's largest-ever single-raid illegal drug haul. The Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare's Narcotics Control Department has arrested three Vietnamese nationals for allegedly smuggling the cannabis hidden in a shipping container and possessing it at a material yard in Tochigi Prefecture, north of Tokyo, it said. The three have been indicted on charges of violating the narcotics control law.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store